Thanks, Christie. Good morning, everyone. The United States Navy recently celebrated its 250th birthday and the U.S. Marine Corps will do the same in the coming weeks. So I would like to start today by thanking both of them for their enduring service to our country and their commitment to our national defense. Thank you for all that you have done and all that you do to protect us and future generations. Moving on to the third quarter, I'll start by discussing our results and division highlights and provide an update on our operational initiatives, then Tom will provide some details on our financial performance and outlook. Before I begin, I'd like to reiterate our commitment to accelerate shipbuilding construction to meet our customers' requirements. We continue to support the identification of strategies to increase throughput across our shipbuilding programs and are working closely with our customer and partners to achieve this important mission. Now turning to our results. This morning, we reported record third quarter sales of $3.2 billion and diluted earnings per share of $3.68. Shipbuilding sales growth of 18% year-over-year was driven by our shipbuilding division's focus on increasing throughput in our shipyards and supported by broader efforts underway to rebuild the U.S. maritime industrial base. Likewise, 11% sales growth at Mission Technologies was driven by our team's continued focus on delivering innovative solutions, including growth in the critical areas of C5ISR; cyber; electronic warfare & space; and live, virtual, and constructive training as well as unmanned systems. Demand for our products and services remain strong. Third quarter contract awards were $2 billion, and our backlog is $56 billion, of which $33 billion is funded. At Newport News, we continue to make progress on submarines and aircraft carriers. The last 2 Virginia-Class Block IV submarines are in the water with SSN 798 Massachusetts having recently completed sea trials and preparing for delivery this year. As for our carrier program, CVN-79 Kennedy continues to make progress in its testing program, and we expect to conduct the ship's first sea trials around the end of the year. And shipbuilders are installing the large components that have now been received on CVN-80 Enterprise, which will allow erection progress to accelerate. Moving to Ingalls. In the third quarter, we successfully completed builders trials for DDG 128 Ted Stevens, bringing her a step closer to acceptance trials and delivery. Our amphibious warship construction continues to make progress with both LHA-8 Bougainville and LPD-30 Harrisburg through integration and testing in support of trials next year. At Mission Technologies, we had another strong quarter of sales at $787 million, along with a book-to-bill of 1.25x and announced key strategic partnerships around future opportunities. First, we joined forces with Babcock International to integrate HII's unmanned underwater vehicles with the Babcock submarine weapon handling and launch systems, while REMUS 620 was validated for torpedo tube deployment. This will position our torpedo tube launch and recovery solutions for international markets. We also announced a partnership with Shield AI to accelerate cross-domain and modular mission autonomy solutions and a partnership with Thales to develop advanced autonomous undersea mine countermeasure capabilities. Additionally, we unveiled the ROMULUS family of unmanned surface vessels powered by our Odyssey Autonomy software and have started building the flagship ROMULUS 190. ROMULUS is one example of numerous projects and contracts underway in Mission Technologies that combines internally developed technology with world-class partner technology to create best-of-breed technology solutions for the war fighter. Now shifting to an update on our operational initiatives. Both Ingalls and Newport News performance was stable to slightly improving in the quarter as we continue to work through ships that were contracted prior to COVID. As I previously indicated, during the contract mix transition from pre-COVID contracts to our newly awarded contracts, we continue to expect some choppiness in performance. The first operational initiative increasing throughput is showing improvement over 2024. Initial indications align with our expectation that the HII and Navy investments in workforce, infrastructure and supply chain will have a positive impact on throughput trajectory. Our updated expectation is to achieve approximately 15% throughput improvement for the full year 2025 as throughput improvements have accelerated throughout the year. From a labor perspective, we have hired over 4,600 shipbuilders year-to-date, and our retention rates have improved at both shipyards. At Newport News, we've seen an increase in experienced hires following the wage investment this summer and increased hiring from regional workforce development pipelines, which provides more proficient incoming shipbuilders. These are important steps to stabilize and level up the experience of our workforce. Also, we are seeing success and expansion of the industrial base with our distributed shipbuilding strategy resulting in significant outsourcing taking place at 23 partners and growing. With the Navy support, we are partnering with shipyards and fabricators in multiple states to grow throughput and improve schedule adherence for all of our shipbuilding programs. The second operational initiative is our $250 million annualized cost reduction effort, and we remain on track to achieve this target. And the final operational initiative is achieving our new contract awards. Having completed the negotiations for the significant award of 2 submarines earlier this year, our teams have pivoted to negotiations of Block VI and the next Columbia award and are working towards having agreements in place late this year. Shifting to activities in Washington. The new fiscal year began with a lapse in appropriations. And as a result, many activities of the federal government have halted. I will note, in the Department of Water shutdown guidance, shipbuilding is 1 of 6 departmental priorities that should be supported to the extent possible with available funds. To date, our programs in shipbuilding have been fully supported, and we've seen no impact to normal operations. We have had immaterial impact to Mission Technologies, but we are watching those programs closely as they are more likely to be impacted by budget timing. We continue to support completion of the FY '26 appropriations process as soon as possible to minimize the impact that a lapse in funding could have on our programs. Both House and Senate defense appropriations bills include critical funding to support the submarine and maritime industrial base. And both bills reflect continued investment in our shipbuilding programs with funding provided for the Columbia-Class and Virginia-Class Submarine programs for CVNs 80 and 81 construction and CVN 82 advanced procurement for the DDG-51 program and for the second of 3 years of funding for the refueling and overhaul of CVN 75. We also look forward to Congress completing work on the fiscal year 2026 National Defense Authorization Bill, qualifying the strong support for shipbuilding and other national security priorities reflected in the respective House and Senate bills. The 2 defense authorization committees continue to show strong support for our company's programs. In summary, we had a solid third quarter with record sales as we ramp production in support of delivering on our commitments. And now I'll turn the call over to Tom for some remarks on our financial performance. Tom?